A practical framework to deploy AI safely, reduce leakage, and stay audit-ready

Executive summary

Caribbean insurers are under sustained pressure: rising claims severity, fraud leakage, climate-driven volatility, customer expectations for faster service, and tighter scrutiny from regulators, reinsurers, and auditors. AI is increasingly positioned as the lever to improve underwriting accuracy, accelerate claims handling, and detect fraud earlier.

But insurance AI is different from generic automation. It directly influences:

  • customer entitlements (claims payouts, policy decisions),

  • pricing and access (premiums, exclusions, renewals), and

  • risk transfer (reinsurance relationships and actuarial assumptions).

That makes governance non-negotiable. The question is not “Can we implement AI?” It is:

Can we implement AI in a way that is fair, explainable, monitored, and defensible?

This article provides a practical AI assurance playbook for Caribbean insurers. It explains:

  • where AI creates the most value in insurance, and where it creates the most risk

  • a risk-tiered governance framework for underwriting, claims, fraud, and service

  • controls for bias, drift, explainability, privacy, and vendor risk

  • how to build AI Evidence Packs that stand up to audit, disputes, and reinsurance scrutiny

  • a 60–90 day roadmap for introducing AI assurance without slowing transformation

Dawgen Global’s AI Assurance & Compliance service helps insurers adopt AI confidently—with “Evidence by Design” and regionally relevant controls.

Request a proposal for Dawgen Global’s AI Assurance & Compliance service:
Email: [email protected] | WhatsApp: +1 555 795 9071

1) Why AI in insurance is a trust issue, not just a technology issue

Insurance runs on trust:

  • customers trust that valid claims will be paid fairly and promptly

  • regulators trust that policyholders are protected

  • reinsurers trust that cedants manage risk discipline and controls

  • boards trust that underwriting and claims decisions are defensible

  • auditors trust that reserves and liabilities are supported by reliable processes

AI can strengthen trust—by improving consistency and reducing fraud. But AI can also undermine trust if it produces outcomes that are:

  • difficult to explain

  • inconsistent across customer groups

  • based on low-quality or biased data

  • unmonitored as conditions change

  • not backed by an audit trail

In the Caribbean context, insurers are often dealing with:

  • fragmented data across legacy systems

  • manual claims processes and unstructured documentation

  • wide socio-economic segmentation in the customer base

  • increased catastrophe exposure and volatility

  • cross-border reinsurance expectations

  • high sensitivity to reputational harm

The practical implication is clear:

If AI influences underwriting, claims, or fraud decisions, your governance must be stronger than your enthusiasm.

2) The highest-value AI use-cases in Caribbean insurance—and their risk tiers

AI opportunities in insurance cluster across four operational pillars: underwriting, claims, fraud, and customer service.

2.1 Underwriting and pricing (High/Critical)

  • risk scoring for motor, health, property, and SME policies

  • pricing optimisation

  • renewal risk prediction and churn prediction

  • portfolio segmentation and risk appetite alignment

Why high risk: underwriting decisions affect access to coverage and premium affordability. Bias and explainability are key concerns.

2.2 Claims triage and processing (High)

  • automated document intake and extraction (medical reports, police reports)

  • claim triage: route to fast-track vs investigation

  • severity prediction and reserve support analytics

  • automation support for standard communications

Why high risk: claims decisions affect entitlements. There is legal and reputational exposure if customers are treated unfairly.

2.3 Fraud detection and leakage control (High/Critical)

  • fraud scoring and anomaly detection

  • network detection (organised fraud rings)

  • provider billing anomalies (health claims)

  • “early warning” flags for adjusters

Why high risk: false positives can delay legitimate claims; false negatives increase leakage. Drift is common as fraud patterns evolve.

2.4 Customer service and retention (Medium/High)

  • GenAI customer service chatbots

  • copilot tools for call centre and agents

  • complaint handling support

  • policy document summarisation and explanation

Why medium/high risk: GenAI hallucinations can create misstatements. Privacy controls are essential.

3) What “AI assurance” means for insurance

AI assurance is the discipline of ensuring AI outcomes remain:

  • fair, consistent, and explainable

  • aligned with underwriting and claims policy

  • monitored over time for drift and anomalies

  • resilient to manipulation and poor data

  • supported by evidence for audit, complaints, disputes, and reinsurance reviews

In insurance, AI assurance needs to integrate with:

  • actuarial governance and reserving discipline

  • claims governance and internal controls

  • compliance and conduct risk

  • data governance and privacy

  • cybersecurity and third-party risk management

  • internal audit and control testing

4) The core insurance AI risks—and how to control them

4.1 Bias and unfair outcomes

Bias can show up through proxies (geography, device type, channel, employment category) rather than explicit attributes.

Controls:

  • fairness testing across segments (region, channel, tenure, product tier)

  • review of input features for proxy risk

  • documented mitigation plans and thresholds

  • customer appeal routes and overrides

4.2 Drift: when models degrade silently

Claims patterns and fraud tactics change quickly. Catastrophe events create structural breaks.

Controls:

  • drift monitoring for input and outcome distributions

  • performance thresholds and retraining triggers

  • periodic revalidation cadence (monthly/quarterly based on tier)

  • scenario testing around catastrophe events

4.3 Explainability gaps

Insurers must often justify:

  • premium adjustments

  • renewal decisions

  • claim routing decisions

  • fraud flags that cause delays

Controls:

  • reason codes and explainable outputs

  • standardised customer communication templates

  • “decision trace” logs for contested outcomes

  • human approval gates for high-impact decisions

4.4 Data quality and documentation risk

Insurance data is messy: unstructured documents, missing fields, inconsistent coding.

Controls:

  • data lineage documentation

  • data quality controls and exception logs

  • validation testing that includes missing-data scenarios

  • model limitations documented clearly

4.5 GenAI hallucinations and policy misstatements

Chatbots and copilots can confidently produce wrong explanations of coverage.

Controls:

  • grounding responses to approved policy content

  • restricted knowledge base and templates

  • hallucination testing and red-team prompts

  • disclaimers and escalation for complex cases

  • privacy controls for conversations and logs

4.6 Vendor and ecosystem risk

Many insurers use vendor platforms for claims management, fraud analytics, and chat solutions.

Controls:

  • vendor due diligence: auditability, logging, version control

  • clear data use terms (training, retention, residency)

  • incident notification SLAs

  • exit and portability requirements

5) The Insurance Evidence Pack: how to stay audit-ready and dispute-ready

The single most powerful tool for insurance AI defensibility is the AI Evidence Pack.

What insurers need to demonstrate

To regulators, auditors, reinsurers, and courts, an insurer must be able to show:

  • how decisions were made and by what logic

  • that models were validated and monitored

  • that customers were treated consistently

  • that overrides and exceptions were controlled

  • that claims outcomes and reserves are supported by reliable process

Evidence Pack contents (insurance-optimised)

  1. Use-case profile: underwriting/claims/fraud/service, risk tier

  2. Governance approvals: owners, controls, escalation paths

  3. Data lineage: sources, transformations, quality checks

  4. Validation results: performance, bias, robustness, stress tests

  5. Monitoring dashboards: drift thresholds, alerts, revalidation cadence

  6. Change control log: model versions, prompt updates, approvals

  7. Incident history: issues, remediation, lessons learned

  8. Case trace samples: claim routing reasons, fraud flags, overrides

  9. Customer communication controls: templates, disclaimers, escalation rules

  10. Reinsurance alignment note: how AI outputs support underwriting and reserving discipline

Evidence Packs reduce friction in audits and strengthen confidence with reinsurers.

6) A practical “Three Gate” approach for claims and fraud AI

Insurance operations benefit from speed—but speed must not override fairness and control.

Dawgen Global recommends a simple model:

Gate 1: Read Gate (data boundary)

  • only approved data sources

  • minimum data needed for the claim stage

  • masking of sensitive data where possible

Gate 2: Decide Gate (policy boundary)

  • AI must map to underwriting/claims policy rules

  • AI must provide reason codes and confidence flags

  • exceptions must be routed for human review

Gate 3: Act Gate (execution boundary)

  • AI can recommend actions; humans approve high-impact decisions

  • claim denial, high-value routing, or fraud escalation requires approval

  • all actions must be logged with version traceability

This keeps workflows efficient while preserving customer fairness.

7) What boards and executives should measure

AI assurance is only meaningful if it produces measurable operational outcomes and risk reduction.

Operational performance KPIs

  • claim cycle time reduction

  • first contact resolution improvements

  • reduction in manual rework

  • straight-through processing rate (where appropriate)

Risk and fairness KPIs

  • fraud detection precision and recall

  • false positive rate (customer harm risk)

  • drift indicators and model health scores

  • complaint volumes linked to AI decisions

  • override rates and reasons

Governance KPIs

  • evidence pack completion rate for high-tier systems

  • incident response time and remediation effectiveness

  • revalidation completion rates vs schedule

8) A 60–90 day roadmap for insurers to become AI-audit-ready

Weeks 1–2: Establish baseline posture

  • inventory AI use-cases (including vendor AI)

  • risk-tier each system

  • identify top 2–3 priority AI systems (underwriting, claims, fraud)

Weeks 3–6: Validate and document

  • baseline performance and fairness tests

  • establish reason code structures

  • document data lineage and quality checks

  • build Evidence Packs for priority systems

Weeks 7–10: Monitor and operationalise

  • implement drift dashboards and alert thresholds

  • define incident runbooks and kill-switches

  • train claims, underwriting, and fraud teams on oversight

  • implement governance reporting rhythm

Weeks 11–12: Scale and “operate” model

  • expand to next wave of AI use-cases

  • implement a subscription assurance approach:

    • monthly monitoring reviews

    • periodic revalidation

    • quarterly executive reporting pack

This is practical and achievable without large internal AI teams.

9) The Dawgen Global advantage for Caribbean insurers

Dawgen Global’s AI Assurance & Compliance service supports insurers through:

  • Insurance-specific control libraries (underwriting/claims/fraud)

  • Audit-ready Evidence Packs designed for disputes and reinsurance scrutiny

  • Bias and drift testing aligned to the realities of Caribbean portfolios

  • GenAI governance for policy explanation, customer service, and agent support tools

  • Borderless, high-quality delivery methodology using multidisciplinary teams for speed and consistency

The outcome is simple: faster claims, better underwriting discipline, reduced leakage, and stronger trust.

Insurers who govern AI well will win trust—and win the market

AI will reshape insurance competitiveness. Those who deploy AI without evidence and controls will absorb avoidable reputational and regulatory risk. Those who deploy AI with assurance will scale confidently and create durable advantage.

The winning formula is:

  • risk-tier AI use-cases

  • validate fairness, drift resilience, and explainability

  • govern GenAI interactions and privacy

  • maintain Evidence Packs

  • embed monitoring and oversight as a routine discipline

Dawgen Global is ready to help Caribbean insurers deploy AI with confidence and defensibility.

Next Step: Request a Proposal

If your insurer is piloting AI in underwriting, claims, fraud, or customer service, now is the time to implement an assurance posture that protects trust and accelerates safe scale.

Request a proposal for Dawgen Global’s AI Assurance & Compliance service:
Email: [email protected]
WhatsApp: +1 555 795 9071

About Dawgen Global

“Embrace BIG FIRM capabilities without the big firm price at Dawgen Global, your committed partner in carving a pathway to continual progress in the vibrant Caribbean region. Our integrated, multidisciplinary approach is finely tuned to address the unique intricacies and lucrative prospects that the region has to offer. Offering a rich array of services, including audit, accounting, tax, IT, HR, risk management, and more, we facilitate smarter and more effective decisions that set the stage for unprecedented triumphs. Let’s collaborate and craft a future where every decision is a steppingstone to greater success. Reach out to explore a partnership that promises not just growth but a future beaming with opportunities and achievements.

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by Dr Dawkins Brown

Dr. Dawkins Brown is the Executive Chairman of Dawgen Global , an integrated multidisciplinary professional service firm . Dr. Brown earned his Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in the field of Accounting, Finance and Management from Rushmore University. He has over Twenty three (23) years experience in the field of Audit, Accounting, Taxation, Finance and management . Starting his public accounting career in the audit department of a “big four” firm (Ernst & Young), and gaining experience in local and international audits, Dr. Brown rose quickly through the senior ranks and held the position of Senior consultant prior to establishing Dawgen.

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Dawgen Global is an integrated multidisciplinary professional service firm in the Caribbean Region. We are integrated as one Regional firm and provide several professional services including: audit,accounting ,tax,IT,Risk, HR,Performance, M&A,corporate recovery and other advisory services

Where to find us?
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Dawgen Global is an integrated multidisciplinary professional service firm in the Caribbean Region. We are integrated as one Regional firm and provide several professional services including: audit,accounting ,tax,IT,Risk, HR,Performance, M&A,corporate recovery and other advisory services

Where to find us?
https://www.dawgen.global/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/img-footer-map.png
Dawgen Social links
Taking seamless key performance indicators offline to maximise the long tail.

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